You're speaking as if they do nothing but rehash old villains, which obviously isn't true. This isn't even the second movie in a row to reuse an old villain.
You're speaking as if they do nothing but rehash old villains, which obviously isn't true. This isn't even the second movie in a row to reuse an old villain.
This I say as a fan of he last movie and a proud owner of the blue ray, but it is not Star Trek, it's imitation Star Trek or Star Trek lite if anything.
You're speaking as if they do nothing but rehash old villains, which obviously isn't true. This isn't even the second movie in a row to reuse an old villain.
Depends on how you look at it. The last two movies have definitely used Khan as a base line:
Shinzon - Super weapon and has an axe to grind with a member of the crew.
Nero - Super weapon, dead wife and has an axe to grind with a member of the crew.
I'll be sorely disappointed if they use a super weapon and a villain with an axe to grind yet again.
EDIT: Though Khan's motivations in The Wrath of Khan actually make sense in comparison to Shinzon and Nero. I guess you can use that as a point that they're nothing alike.![]()
Well, Khan has no axe to grind yet, just like he not yet had an axe to grind in Space Seed.
I doubt "revenge" will be the concept that drives the plot for this film.
Well, Khan has no axe to grind yet, just like he not yet had an axe to grind in Space Seed.
I doubt "revenge" will be the concept that drives the plot for this film.
Well, Khan has no axe to grind yet, just like he not yet had an axe to grind in Space Seed.
I doubt "revenge" will be the concept that drives the plot for this film.
I'm neither for or against Khan appearing in the next film. I simply want a good film. But they were able to wedge in revenge as a driving motivation for the villain in each of the last two films without the audience ever being introduced to the characters prior.
this movie would actually have ended the continuity obsession of the franchise instead of intensified it.
The last movie showed that continuity obsession is not merely a problem of (some of) the fans but also of the studio and creative folks. If you take stuff like ENT's last season, Star Trek - The Beginning, Star Trek - Federation and the upcoming movie into account it becomes clear that this is not a problem of particular Trek incarnation or particular people but rather a structural problem of the franchise.Call me skeptical, but even in the unlikely event that someone had been able to persuade the franchise owners and filmmakers that a complete break from the older continuity and full restart in a new one was the best way to proceed, I strongly doubt that anything short of the end of the Universe (and thus existence as we know it) would be likely to put an end to continuity arguments among the Trek community-at-large, no matter how many familiar and comfy aliens were included....
No inside jokes and familiar Trek aliens galore and this movie would actually have ended the continuity obsession of the franchise instead of intensified it.
Erm, evil guy with really big gun looking for revenge is a really old trope and/or archetype and not exclusively associated with Khan.So I'd say that three movies with Khan
I'm not sure how exactly the Khan in this new film will have the "Revenge Thing" going on, like Shinzon and Nero did....So I'd say that three movies with Khan in a row are rather a symptom of this structural problem than its cause.
I just find it horribly unlikely that, in this version of reality, the Enterprise is still just going to run into the Botany Bay and wake up the super-humans like it did before. Space is too big for that.
Who says that's what's going to happen?I just find it horribly unlikely that, in this version of reality, the Enterprise is still just going to run into the Botany Bay and wake up the super-humans like it did before. Space is too big for that.
I just find it horribly unlikely that, in this version of reality, the Enterprise is still just going to run into the Botany Bay and wake up the super-humans like it did before. Space is too big for that.
Right.I just find it horribly unlikely that, in this version of reality, the Enterprise is still just going to run into the Botany Bay and wake up the super-humans like it did before. Space is too big for that.
I just find it horribly unlikely that, in this version of reality, the Enterprise is still just going to run into the Botany Bay and wake up the super-humans like it did before. Space is too big for that.
Shinzon is a revenge-hungry loner who wants to kill Picard (for whatever reasons). Same with Nero who wants to kill Spock (for whatever reasons) and in addition to that also basically has Kirk's "Khan!!!" line from TWOK.Erm, evil guy with really big gun looking for revenge is a really old trope and/or archetype and not exclusively associated with Khan.So I'd say that three movies with Khan
Now, had the previous two movies contained a bad guy who was also a genially-engineered superhuman dictator from the past, your statement might be true.
I just find it horribly unlikely that, in this version of reality, the Enterprise is still just going to run into the Botany Bay and wake up the super-humans like it did before. Space is too big for that.
Who says it'll be the Enterprise? My guess, the Klingons do, shortly after George Kirk's death. A Khan who's been among Klingons for the past 25 years....
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